WATER WORLD
Study of cloud cover in tropical Pacific reveals future climate changes
by Staff Writers
Miami IL (SPX) Nov 06, 2015


Walker Circulation is illustrated. Image courtesy NOAA Climate.gov. For a larger version of this image please go here.

A new analysis using changes in cloud cover over the tropical Indo-Pacific Ocean showed that a weakening of a major atmospheric circulation system over the last century is due, in part, to increased greenhouse gas emissions.

The findings from researchers at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science provide new evidence that climate change in the tropical Pacific will result in changes in rainfall patterns in the region and amplify warming near the equator in the future.

"Our findings show that an increasing concentration of greenhouse gases leads to significant changes in atmospheric circulation and tropical rainfall patterns," said Katinka Bellomo, an alumna of the UM Rosenstiel School.

"This study demonstrates that we can predict these changes in the Walker circulation from changes in cloud cover."

The UM Rosenstiel School researchers used historical observations of cloud cover as a proxy for wind velocity in climate models to analyze the Walker circulation, the atmospheric air flow and heat distribution in the tropic Pacific region that affects patterns of tropical rainfall.

Their findings revealed a weakening and eastward shift of the Walker circulation over the last century due to greenhouse gas emissions.

The analysis showed that changes in cloud cover can serve as a proxy in climate models for wind velocity in the atmosphere, which cannot be directly measured.

"This study makes innovative use of a decades old-dataset," said Amy Clement, professor of atmospheric science at the UM Rosenstiel School.

"It is impressive that visual observations from the decks of ships transiting the Pacific Ocean over a half-century can tell us something so fundamental about climate change."

This new information can be incorporated into current climate models to predict future changes in the magnitude and pattern of the Walker Circulation due to increased greenhouse gas emissions. The study suggests that rainfall will decrease over Indonesia and in the western Pacific and increase over the central Pacific Ocean.

The study, titled "Evidence for weakening of the Walker circulation from cloud observations," was published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. The study's authors include: Katinka Bellomo and Amy C. Clement of the UM Rosenstiel School.

.


Related Links
University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

Previous Report
WATER WORLD
Fiji leader says Pacific 'doomed' if climate talks fail
Suva, Fiji (AFP) Oct 29, 2015
Fiji's prime minister says he fears Pacific island nations are "doomed" because industrialised countries appear set to reject a global climate pact at crunch talks in Paris in December. Powerful polluting nations were willing to sacrifice the low-lying islands to rising seas rather than risk the economic growth that fuels their lifestyles, Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama said. He said ... read more


WATER WORLD
Lockheed Martin to build Ballistic Missile Defense radar

USS Ross intercepts ballistic missile during coalition test

Russia Calls on US to Abandon Plans to Place Missile Defense in Romania

Russia's Aerospace Forces Never Miss a Missile Launch... Anywhere

WATER WORLD
France, U.K. unveil new agreement on next-generation missiles

UK plane entering Sharm el-Sheikh 'missed rocket by 300m'

California missile test sparks frenzy, spooks residents

Russia sent missile systems to Syria: air force chief

WATER WORLD
Deal on using satellites for global flight-tracking in sight: US

Italy seeks to arm its MQ-9 Reapers

US Air Force renews ISR support contract with Raytheon

Wal-Mart eyes drone home deliveries

WATER WORLD
DARPA's RadioMap Program Enters Third Phase

Raytheon producing FAB-T terminals for Air Force

Harris mesh reflectors deployed on 4th MOUS Bird

Airbus intros military satellite communications service

WATER WORLD
Report: U.S. Navy received almost 400 patents in fiscal 2015

Sniper Advanced Targeting Pods approved for Kuwait

Northrop Grumman delivers prototype shelters to U.S. Army

Microsoft Military Affairs to expand IT training program

WATER WORLD
Bullets, cluster bombs at Thai arms fair despite censure over junta rule

Rosoboronexport touts business growth

Lockheed Martin, Boeing want answers on bomber contract award

U.S. military sales more than $47B in fiscal 2015

WATER WORLD
US defense chief warns of conflict in S. China Sea

Historic Ma-Xi summit heavy on rhetoric but schism remains

Push for muscular military leaves many Japanese uneasy

In, out or in-between: Obama's foreign policy

WATER WORLD
Finally a promising natural nanomaterial

Umbrella-shaped diamond nanostructures make efficient photon collectors

Anti-clumping strategy for nanoparticles

Are cars nanotube factories on wheels